José Antonio Dávila

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José Antonio Dávila

Dr. José Antonio Dávila
Born October 7, 1898
Bayamon, Puerto Rico
Died December 4, 1941
Bayamon
Occupation poet
Nationality Puerto Rican
Literary movement postmodernism (?)
Notable work(s) Vendimia
Relative(s) Virgilio Dávila (father)

Dr. José Antonio Dávila (October 7, 1898 December 4, 1941) was a postmodern Puerto Rican poet.

Life and career

Dávila was born and raised in Bayamon, Puerto Rico into a literary family; he received both his primary and secondary education here and went to high school in Santurce, San Juan.

Early years

In 1918, he enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico and later transferred to Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia where he studied medicine, earning his medical degree in 1924; after graduating he established a medical practice there.

He was married to Alma Blake with whom he had a son (José Antonio Dávila, Jr.). Dávila became fatally ill and had to abandon his medical practice. He was interned at the Saranac Lake Hospital in New York, but returned to Puerto Rico in 1930.[1] He is now buried in the city's Porta Coeli Cemetery, next to his father.

Dávila became a renowned poet and received an award from the Puerto Rican Institute of Culture for his poem Vendimia (1940). His main source of inspiration was his father, the poet and Mayor of Bayamon, Virgilio Dávila.[2]

Written works

Much of Dávila's work was published posthumously. Besides Vendimia, his other works are:[1][2]

  • Los Motivos de Tristan ('The Motives of Tristan') (1957)
  • Poemas (Poems) (1964)
  • Almacen de Baratijas
  • Carta de Recomendación "Señor: en breve llegará a tu cielo una tímida y dulce viejecita ..."

Davila also wrote a biography of the Bayamonese musician and composer Mariano Feliú Balseiro.

Commemmoration

The City of Bayamon has named a school and an avenue after him.[1][2]

See also

References

External links

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